The Temptation of Saint Anthony is an often-repeated subject in the history of art and literature, concerning the supernatural
temptation reportedly faced by
Saint Anthony the Great during his sojourn in the Egyptian desert. Anthony's temptation is first discussed by
Athanasius of Alexandria, Anthony's contemporary, and from then became a popular theme in Western culture.
The common medieval subject, included in the Golden Legend and other sources, shows Saint Anthony being tempted or assailed in the desert by demons, whose temptations he resisted; the Temptation of St Anthony (or Trial...) is the more common name of the subject. But strictly there are at least two different episodes deriving from
Athanasius's Life of St. Anthony and later versions of the life that may be represented, though all usually have this name. The most common is the temptation, by seductive women and other demonic forms, but the
Martin Schongauer composition (copied by
Michelangelo) probably shows a later episode where St Anthony, normally flown about the desert supported by
angels, was ambushed and attacked in mid-air by
devils.[1] Anasthasius describes another episode where the saint was attacked on the ground.
History
The earliest work to depict Saint Anthony being assaulted by demons is a
wall painting in the atrium of
Santa Maria Antiqua of the 10th century.[2] The subject became especially popular in the late European Middle Ages, from around 1450. The century following saw the most famous depictions in book illumination, prints and paintings. These include the depictions of
Martin Schöngauer (ca. 1470),
Hieronymus Bosch (ca. 1505) and
Matthias Grünewald (1512–1516).
In the modern era the theme has been treated by the Spanish painter
Salvador Dalí and the
French author
Gustave Flaubert, who considered his 1874 book The Temptation of Saint Anthony to be his masterwork. Flaubert's contemporary
Odilon Redon was inspired by the 1874 interpretation to create three series of lithographs. The works have been compiled together in publications including a free eBook by
Project Gutenberg.
In 1946 the David L. Loew-Albert Lewin film production company held a contest for a painting on the theme of Saint Anthony's Temptation, with the winner to be used in the film The Private Affairs of Bel Ami. Various artists produced paintings on this subject, and the contest was won by
Max Ernst,
whose work was duly shown in the film. However, the most well-known of these paintings is a failed contestant,
Salvador Dalí's version.
The Temptation of Saint Anthony (Michelangelo), a 15th-century painting by Michelangelo (his first), which was painted after the Schongauer engraving, in the Kimbell Museum in Ft. Worth.